(Novum/AP) - Bij een overstroming van rioolwater in het noorden van de Gazastrook zijn dinsdag drie mensen omgekomen. Een onbekend aantal wordt vermist. In het dorp Umm Naser, met een bevolking van drieduizend, brak de aarden wal van een groot bassin waar het riool in uitmondt en werden minstens 25 huizen bedolven onder een stroom modder en afvalwater.
Een 70-jarige vrouw, een 4-jarig jongetje en een man kwamen daarbij om het leven en 25 mensen raakten gewond, meldde een medewerker van het Palestijnse ministerie van gezondheid. Duizenden dorpsbewoners zijn op de vlucht geslagen. Reddingswerkers en gewapende leden van Hamas zoeken naar overlevenden. Ziad Abu Farya, hoofd van de dorpsraad, noemde de overstroming 'onze tsunami'.
Volgens Fadel Kawash, hoofd van de Palestijnse waterautoriteit, was het niveau van het afvalwater in het bassin de afgelopen dagen gestegen en is een van de wanden onder de vergrote druk bezweken. De installatie in Umm Naser is een van de door buitenlandse geldschieters gefinancierde rioolwaterzuiveringsprojecten die werden stilgelegd nadat Hamas vorig jaar de verkiezingen won.
Copyright, Novum
[img width=465 height=320]http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/images/2007/03/27/image2611782.jpg[/img]
(AP) An earth embankment around a cesspool collapsed Tuesday, spewing a river of sewage and mud that killed four people and forced residents to flee from this village in the northern Gaza Strip, officials said. A local official blamed shoddy infrastructure in Umm Naser, a town of 3,000.
A 70-year-old woman, two small children and a teenager died in the sudden flood, and 25 people were injured, said Dr. Muawiya Hassanin of the Palestinian Health Ministry. Many of the village's houses were submerged or seriously damaged.
Fadel Kawash, head of the Palestinian Water Authority, said the level of sewage in the pool had increased over the past few days, creeping up the earth embankments around the pool until one collapsed, "causing the sewage to pour toward the village."
Ziad Abu Farya, head of the village council, described the scene as "our tsunami."
Rescue crews and gunmen from the militant Muslim group Hamas rushed to the area to search for people feared buried under the slide of sewage and mud. Most residents fled or were evacuated. Three children left on a cart pulled by a donkey, heading toward the nearby town of Beit Lahiya.
Angry residents drove reporters out of the area and mobbed government officials who arrived at the scene. When Interior Minister Hani Kawasmeh arrived to survey the damage, his bodyguards fired in the air to disperse the crowd.
"We lost everything. Everything was covered by the flood. It's a disaster," said Amina Afif, 65, whose small shack was destroyed.
The Water Authority's Kawash said Gaza's poor infrastructure was to blame for the accident.
Several major sewage treatment projects funded by foreign donors, including one near Umm Naser, were frozen after Hamas won elections last year. The U.S. and EU consider Hamas a terrorist group.
"We had a project to treat sewage in north Gaza, it was worked on for two years," Kawash said. "We built a pressure pipe line and pumping station," he added. "But it was stopped after ... troubles began."
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum blamed the "sanctions against Palestinians, including Gaza and the West Bank" for the condition of Gaza's infrastructure.
The Israeli army offered humanitarian assistance to help clean up the spill. There was no word on whether the offer had been accepted.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press /CBSNEWS.com